The Mason City Globe-Gazette from Mason City, Iowa · Page 5

Page 5 article text (OCR)

F
I
V
E
MAY
3
1934
MASON
CITY
GLOBE-GAZETTE
SEEK
TO
TRACE
LEAKS
TO
SPIES
France
Attempts
to
Follow
Trail
of
Former
Polish
Army
Officer.
PARIS.
May
3.
(.W--France's
best
spy
catchers
worked
feverishly
in
the
historic
citadel
at
Belfort
today
in
an
effort
to
trace
the
leaks
in
her
closely
guarded
military
secrets.
They
bent
their
efforts
particularly
toward
following
the
trail
ol
Stanislas
Krauss,
former
Polish
army
officer,
who
was
arrested
yesterday
as
a.
German
spy.
"
At
the
same
time,
however,
a
torce
of
detectives
and
secret
police
were
investigating
the
activities
at
this
fortified
town
near
the
Franco
German
frontier
of
Captain
Frogi
.'
of
the
French
army,
accused
of
hav
ing
been
Krauss'
accomplice.
The
army
officer's
lawyers
demanded
an
immediate
hearing
for
Froge
today.
They
declared
it
was
"suspicious"
that
a
new
witness
had
been
aligned
against
him
just
when
French
operatives
were
on
the
point
of
concluding
he
was
not
involved
in
the
asserted
plot.
In
announcing
the
arrest
of
the
officer
yesterday
after
they
said
Krauss
had
confessed
Captain
Froge
sold
him
56,500
worth
of
military
secrets
for
Germany,
police
revealed
they
had
been
ready
to
exonerate
Froge
of
charges
previously
lodged
against
him
when
the
new
accusations
were
raised.
HERRING
GREETS
2,000
AT
SESSION
(Continued
From
i'are
X)
thority
in
Washington
for
alleged
violations
of
the
hatchery
code,
said
he
would
be
here
to
talk
on
the
code.
Short
Addresses
Group.
Wallace
M.
Short
of
Sioux
City,
candidate
for
the
republican
nomi
nation
for
governor,
addressed
the
group
just
before
noon.
He
appeal-
Â»d
to
the
association
to
work
"to
put
men
into
the
statehouses
of
the
midwest
who
will
confer
with
self
respecting
citizens
to
find
out
what
we
need
and
then
give
whole
hearted
support
to
that
program.'
Reno
was
cheered
at
the
close
ol
hia
address
when
he
asserted
that
"Secretary
Wallace
is
no
morei
qualified
for
secretary
of
agriculture
than
a
hill
billy
in
the
Tennessee
mountains
is
qualified
to
operate
a
railroad."
"Secretary
Wallace
has
been
the
worst
enemy
the
farmer
has
ever
had
in
an
official
position,"
the
holiday
leader
said
in
reiterating
previous
criticisms
of
the
department
of
agriculture
head.
In
Perfect
Harmony.
"He
has
been
in
perfect
harmony
with
that
group
of
political
shysters
of
half
baked
brain
trusters,
that
have
used
every
effort
to
break
down
and
destroy
the
self-
laws,
and
the
NRA
is
rapidly
destroying
the
small
merchant
and
dis-
:ributor."
.
"It
is
a
notorious
fact,"
Reno
said,
'that
through
bureaus
and
departments
government
has
entered
into
arbitrary
control
of
every
line
of
business
in
the
United
States
from
chicken
hatcheries
and
the
retailing
of
milk,
to
the
stock
exchanges.
Covenant
Voided.
"I
am
not
arguing
the
right
or
the
wrong
of
these
violations,"
Reno
asserted.
"I
am
simply
calling
the
attention
of
the
public
to
the
fact
that
the
sacred
covenant
of
the
people
has
been
entirely
voided."
"Secretary
Wallace,"
Reno
alleged,
"has
entirely
reversed
himself
since
becoming
secretary
of
agriculture."
In
1930,
the
farm
holiday
leader
charged,
Wallace
advocated
increased
production
of
pigs
and
criticized
corn
crop
curtailment
now
being
carried
out
under
the
agricultural
adjustment
administration.
Before
assuming
office,
Reno
said,
the
secretary
of
agriculture
advocated
inflation
to
liquidate
farm
debts
but
later
held
that
"there
is
some
danger
that
the
increase
in
speculative
farm
commodity
prices
may
make
the
adjustment
of
sup-
jly
and
demand
in
the
long
run
dif-
icult."
Criticizes
Legislation.
Earlier
in
his
speech
Reno
criticized
farm
relief
legislation
of
the
TELLTALE
EVIDENCE
FOUND
IN
DILLINGER
CAR
Governor's
Day
at
Iowa
to
Be
May
12
DES
MOINES,
May
3.
(A
5
)--Adjutant
General
Charles
Grahl
has
anounced
that
the
annual
governor's
day
exercises
at
the
University
of
Jowa
will
be
held
May
12.
A
reception
and
luncheon
for
the
governor
and
his
military
staff
will
be
followed
"by
competitive
drills
and
a
review
of
the
S.
A.
T.
C.
respect
and
self-reliance
of
the
'armers.
"Mr
Wallace
is
no
more
qualified
for
secretary
of
agriculture
than
a
hill-billy
in
the
Tennessee
mountains
is
qualified
to
operate
a
railroad."
Â·
,
The
administration
has
failed
to
keep
campaign
pledges
which,
Reno
said,
won
President
Roosevelt
the
support
of
the
holiday
association.
Unfulfilled
Planks.
These
unfulfilled
c
a
m
p
a
i
g
n
planks,
Reno
said,
pledged
price
in
excess
of
cost
for
basic
farm
commodities,
enforcement
of
anti-trust
laws
to
prevent
unfair
trade
practice,
and
removal
of
government
from
private
enterprise.
Both
the
president
and
Secretary
Wallace
have
opposed
vigorously
consideration
of
cost
plus
production
to
the
farmer,
Reno
charged
The
antitrust
law
plank,
he
continued,
enforcement
"has
been
loover
administration,
"Its
complete
and
absolute
failure,
the
destruction
it
wrought
upon
every
institution
and
individual
that
.
it
louched,
will
go
down
in
history
as
one
of
the
great
pathetic
periods
in
;he
history
of
America,"
he
said.
The
United
farmers
of
Canada,
Jirough
its
general
secretary,
Frank
Eliazon
of
Saskatchewan,
wired
the
convention
a
pledge
of
support.
"We
demand
that
the
production
for
profit
system
to
be
replaced
by
a
system
of
production
for
use,"
the
telegram
read.
"Organized
farmers
of
Saskatchewan
stand
squarely
behind
our
American
brothers
in
the
fight
for
economic
justice
and
freedom."
Leon
Vanderly
of
New
Tork
City,
representing
several
northeastern
state
holiday
associations,
planned
to
present
a
program
condemning
communistic,
fascist
and
nazi
organizations
and
calling
for
a
socially
RATED
AS
"GOOD'
oon
Rapids,
Sioux
Center,
Cedar
Stills:
Rood,
Sac
City.
Leon.
Gii-ls'
Glee
club
class
A
A
~Sn|'*r-
Kast
DCS
Moines;
excellent,
East
Waterloo,
West
Waterloo,
Burlington,
North
Des
Moines;
good,
Mason
City,
Newton.
Celio
solo--Superior,
Bert
Kuschan
North
Des
Moincs,
A
dele
Wchman.
Burlington;
excellent.
Constance
Altland.
East
Waterloo.
Betty
Benson,
Audubon.
Virginia
Gasi'nk.
East
Sioux
City;
good,
Forrest
Sanders,
Plover.
LiiveniB
Boy
Superior.
Contralto
solo--Superior.
W
i
l
m
a
Highland,
Roland;
excellent,
Nadine
Liridquist,
Spirit
Lake.
Madge
Jones.
Washington.
Cedar
ilapids.
Ruth
Foster,
Roosevelt.
DCS
Moines.
Havel
'Mac
Tyler.
Shcnandoali.
Vir-
Spccial
Edition
of
German
Weekly
Gives
"Jewish
Ritual
Murder."
JJKI'.HN,
May
3.
I'.T'i---Details
of
a
"Jewish
plot
to
murder
Adolf
H
i
t
-
ler"
H
open
red
today
in
an
officially
countenanced
special
edition
of
the
antUemitic
weekly,
"The
Stormcr."
Twelve
pages
were
devoted
to
discussion
of
"Jewish
ritual
murder."
climaxed
with
the
allegation
that
world
Jewry
is
planning
"the
biggest,
most
gruesome
ritual
murder
against
Hitler
and
his
followers
witnessed
by
the
world."
Asserting-
that
Czar
Nicholas
W;K
a
victim
of
a.
similar
plot,
the
paper
said,
"the
Aryans
of
the
world,
tin;
pick
of
humanity,
arc
to
be
a
n
n
i
h
i
-
ing
editor
ot
the
Dubuque
Telegraph-Herald.
(Associated
Press
I
h
u
t
o
i
.
__
n
l
a
t
l
K
nG
COnullUcU.
lias
uecu
Â·Â»Â·Â«-Â»
--
-
v
k
e
p
t
b
y
abolishing
the
anti-trust
controlled
monetary
system.
I
BUY
HERE
AND
SAVE
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
SALES
.
-----Â·--------^^^^^^Â·^^Â·^^^^Â·Â·Â·Â·Â·Â·^^^Â·^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^
i^^^H^^HHMBBHHm^--
ill
Mother's
Day
Is
Sunday,
May
13
Surprise
and
delight
her
with
(IsHcJous
candy.
Sowing
imskets,
hnmt
mndi-,
filled
with
wonderful
chocolates
$l-$2
MM.
Stover's
Viunous
Bungalow
Candles,
appropriately
boxed*
50c,
55c,
75c
,;
$1.00,
$1.10
up
wrapped
Free
for
mailing-
Place
your
order
now.
WASHABLE
Wall
Paper
There
are
no
other
papers
like
these.
Only
Imperial
Wall
Papers
offer
comp
l
e
t
e
washability.
You
can.safely
wash
them
a
g
a
i
n
and
again.
P
r
i
c
e
s
to
please.
GOLF
BALLS
Real
duality.
Special
3
for
$1.00
50c
Pound
Hospital
9
7
~
Cotton
....
Â·
'
Â«-
SLENIJER-ALL
SALTS
$1.00
/
size
...L.
TAKE
PICTURES
NOW
They
become
treasured
keepsakes
through
the
years.
Pictures
recall
so
many
happy
events.
Kodaks
?5
up.
Brownies
?2
u[.
Fresh
films
for
all
sizes.
Leave
your
Films
here
lor
speed.v
developing
service.
Skin
Balm
50c
7Q
r
Size
...
Â£Â»
M
-
Baby
Oil
Size
FRAGRANTAIRE
RUSSIAN
NINERAL
OIL
Has
3
uses.
*
drop
or
two
on
any
electric
light
bulb,
heated
radiator
or
radiator
tube,
perfumes
the
home.
For
the
person--a
touch
of
Fragrantaire
to
the
jsais,
on
the
hair,
or
handkerchief,
(leaves
an
alluring
and
lasting
fragrance.
4
odors.
Bottle
lianciKercmei,
50c
PEPSODENT
tooth
paste
CALLS
FOR
END
OF
EXPERIMENT
Strawn,
Chamber
Speaker,
Asks
Congress
to
Curb
Legislation.
WASHINGTON,
May
3.
(.T)--The
Chamber
of
Commerce
of
the
United
States
heard
today
a
call
requesting
President
E,oosevelt
to
"cease
experimenting"
and
asking
congress
to
stop
enacting
"hysterical
legislation."
Silas
Strawn,
former
chamber
president
and
a
leader
of
its
conservative
wing,
asserted
in
an
address
that,
businessmen
now
wanted
"more
definite
promises"
in
order
to
plan
their
future
conduct.
Counter
to
Harrlman.
The
Chicago
-.awyer
ran
directly
counter
in
tenor
to
the
generally
approving
remarks
of
Henry
I.
Harriman,
present
chamber
president,
concerning
the-
new
deal.
Strawn
attacked
what
he
called
the
abandonment
of
a
scheme
of
government
which
has
made
"us
happier
and
more
prosperous
than
any
other
nation."
He
called
for
-a
three
way
action
by
Mr.
Roosevelt:
Balance
All
Budgets.
Balancing
of
all
governmental
budgets;
a
definite
announcement
that
there
will
be
no
more
requests
for
emergency
legislation
and
"no
more
tinkering
with
the
dollar;"
I
Scattered
Showers
in
Parts
of
State
Give
Farmers
Hope
DES
MOINES.
May
3.
U-')--Scattered
showers
falling
in
parts
of
the
state
early
today
gave
farmers
some
hope
of
drought
relief.
The
Iowa
weathor
bureau
reported
that
as
yet
no
general
relief
is
in
sight.
The
showers
this
morning
were
iocal
and
afforded
little
benefit
to
soil
and
crops
with
the
possible
exception
of
a
.30
inch
rain
at
Forest
City,
the
bureau
said.
The
greater
humidity,
however,
vvill
provide
some
relief
to
crops,
the
bureau
said,
since
evaporation
will
not
be
as
great.
The
Mason
City
aiea
had
a
slight
rain
early
Thursday
morning.
the
Crowell
Publishing
company
and
a
trustee
of
the
Century
company,
died
last
night
in
United
hos-
pita'l,
Port
Chester.
N.
Y.,
as
result
of
a
stroke
of
apoplexy
suffered
10
days
ago.
He.
was
TB
years
old.
SEEK
DILLINGER
"DEAD
OR
ALIVE"
iCinillnurd
From
1'w
II
Siiiia.
Crane.
Battle
Creok:
Rood.
Bontta
Ahlquist.
Thomas
Jefferson.
Council
Bluffs,
Fern
Wolf.
Lansing.
"That
is
the
wish
of
all
Jcwdom
Maxine
Baxter.
Fort
Madison.
i
and
it
has
been
resolved
by
the
Jew-
Clarinet
solo
Superior.
Dick
j
ish
Kahal
(Jewish
secret
world
gov-
Marneltc.
Llncotn.
Des
Moines.
j
c
r
n
m
c
n
t
i
"
Richard
Nivcr,
Luvernc.
Thomas:
_
Aycrs,
Iowa
City.
Don
Kcsslor,
j
Washington,
Cedar
Rapids:
excel-
j
i
lent.
V.'ayne
Summers.
Clarinda.
j
.lohii
Bcckwith,
Central.
Sioux
City,
i
Forrest
Kirchncr.
North
DCS
Moines.
|
Harris
HciK,
Manson;
good,
.luie
]
Humble.
Washington;
Nadine
Lind-
i
quist,
Spirit
Lake.
Koger
Downing
Superior.
j
[
Baritone-bass
solo
--
Superior.
I
I
Denton
Cobble.
Siblcy;
James
Rog-
crs.
Kcota,
Roger
Downing.
Mason
]
City:
excellent,
Norman
Stewart.
Sac
City;
good.
Ted
Fligstdn.
East
DCS
Moines.
Vcrn
Hcrold.
Crcsco.
Arthur
Smith,
Clarinda.
Edward
j
Cain
Storm
Lake.
j
u
*".
......
^
*...,
....~.,Trombone
solo-
Superior.
Edwin
j
j,,
gt.
Louis,
held
a
lone
vigil
in
the.
HaalE.
Audubon,
Paul
Lyness,
low-'.
Miiscatiue
county
jail
through
tlio
City.
Robcn
Wampler.
North
Des
night
Wednesday
and
again
today
Moincs;
excellent.
Keith
Kimbcrlin.
]
while
eight
men
and
four
women
Wcldon.
Dick
Tymeson,
Storm
|
r,-
0
m
this
county
argued
over
his
Lake.
Lyman
Riner.
West
Waterloo,
j
fate.
Shirley
Moen,
Inwood,
Earnest
|
ITALLENT
AWAITS
raoiGT
OF
JURY
Confessed
Slayer
in
Jail
at
Muscatine
While
Fate
Is
Pondered.
WAPELLO,
'May
3.
i.l'i-Eddie
ward
JTallent.
2-1
year
old
confessed
slay-
i
or
of
Martin
Wolz,
whose
home
George
l-Iii7.cn
Dies.
NEW
YORK.
May
3.
/!'--George
H.
Hazcn,
chairman
oC
the
board
of
chine
jrun
battles
they
might
have
with
the
policc-a
common
practice,
the
authorities
said,
of
gangsters
expecting
trouble.
In
the
machine
were
a
pile
of
bandages,
several
boxes
of
paper
matches
Irom
the
Little
Bohemia
resort,
and
a
copy
of
a
Dubuque
newspaper,
with
a
headline:
"Dillingcr
Â»n
rampage.
1
Other
indications
that
DiHnigei
i--
hiding
out
somewhere
in
the
Chicago
al
'
ca
camc
Mo
'"
la
'
"""'"'"Â·?'
when
one
of
four
gunmen
who
disarmed
a
squad
of
Ecllwood
police,
was
identified
as
Dillingcr.
Bchn,
Sheffield.
Viola
solo--Superior,
Merle
Hugh.
Cherokee,
Betty
Cubbage,
Roosevelt.
DCS
Moincs.
Pauline
Sutherland,
East
Waterloo:
excellent.
The
jury
was
forced
to
decide
Dorothy
McTntosli.
Sigourncy.
Costa
Rumeli'ote,
Mason
City,
Anglcsea
Ashy,
Burlington,
Mildred
Jensen,
1
Abraham
Lincoln.
Council
Bluffs.
H
i
g
h
S
t
u
d
e
n
t
s
Xnmrcl.
L
A
K
K
MILLS,
May
:;.-
I
n
the
senior
class
lona
Thoe,
d
a
u
g
h
t
e
r
nl
]\lr.
and
Mm.
Ed
Thoe.
w
i
l
l
be
val-
erson,
salutitorian.
\\-hcthcr
Tallent
should
pay
with
his
life,
for
the
brutal
slaying
in
which
he
Tony
Thompson
of
St.
Louis
and
Paul
Hake.
Louisa
county
farm
hand
participated:
whether
ha
should
spend
the
remainder
of
his
l
i
f
e
in
prison,
or
whether
he
should,
be
acquitted
on
the
grounds
t
h
a
t
he
is
insane
now
and
was
insane
at,
the
t
i
m
e
the
m
u
r
d
e
r
was
committed.
Deliberations
of
the
jury,
which,
bft'-nn
s
h
o
r
t
l
y
a
f
t
e
r
3:30
p.
m.
Wed*
ncsday
c
o
n
t
i
n
u
e
d
until
30
p.
m
I
morning.
50c
tube
--
Â·
l
|
l
'
--
OVALTINE
Food
Tonic
Schick
Electric
Razor
Drv
shaver.
Ask
for
demonstration
$1.00
size
76.
Imported
Face
Powder,
Â¥1.25
size
l
Pound
Brushless
t
Q
Shave
for
only
L
J^__.
size
Cleansing
Tissues
Soft
07,
Sheets
0
i
White
and
Colors
CASHMERE
BOQUET
SOAP
BATHEX
Delightful
perfumed
w
a
t
e
r
softener.
5
pound
can,
Sl.OO
value,
for
-
50c
Vick's
I
35c
Aspirin
Nose
OQ
r
I
Special
Drops
O"C
I
at
...
21c
$1.50
Alarm
Clocks
$1.19
TOILET
WATERS
Assorted
Odors
$1.00
size
:..
"WHO'S
AFRAID?"
WASHINGTON,
May
3.
UP)-The
Chamber
of
Commerce
of
the
United
States
has
musically
asked
rough,
gruff
Hugh
S.
Johnson
"who's
afraid
of
the
big,_
bad
wolf?"
This
was
the
greeting-
an
orchestra
gave
the
recovery
aa-
ministrator
last
night
as
he
stepped
before
several
hundred
commerce
members
to
tell
about
the
NRA
and
undergo
their
questioning.
Johnson
grinned.
The
crowd
laughed.
At
your
DEALER'S
NOW1
Only
one
to
a
family--
55c
Burma
j
50c
Forhan's
j
35c
Shave
*Â·),,
I
Tooth
OQ-
I
Nail
for
....?*Â£Â£
I
Powder
Â«3"C
|
Polish
35c
Cutcx
Big
Stationery
Value
]
pound--60
sheets
Vellum
and
50
envelopes
for
ASPIRIN
tablets-Bayer
iv
Wondersoft
PALMOLIVE
Shaving
Cream
Kotex
17c
revcallnc
outlines.
Marvelous
comfort.
Greater
protection.
MODESS
.
.
KLEENEX
17c
17c
SPARKLET
SYPHON
Perfect
Mixer.
Easily
recharged
at
home
Cartridge
refills
75c
and
S1..S5
SI.30
Sal
Hepatica
97
LOOK!
50c
box
Arniand
face
powder
and
50c
JS'oroma
deodorant
pencil.
$1.00
value
for
only
MELLO-GLO
Sensational
Beauty
Offer.
Sl.OO
soft
tone
face
powder
and
60c
rejuvenating
cream.
(tjl
Sl.GO
value
for
V
Â·*Â·
35c
tube
MIXED
NUTS--Toasted
daily
in
fresh
creamery
butter.
Always
hot.
Pecans,
cashews,
almonds,
peanuts.
Mixed.
pound
CEXOL
for
MOTHS
Kills
moths
and
mothproofs
with
1
application
"on
all
fabrics
and
furs.
jiOc.
7iic.
gl.25
HAND
"BRUSHES
..ioc
PEBECO
Tooth
Paste
25c
f
An
tube
JL
?Â»
--
l-l
I
'
-Hinds
Honey
and
Almond
Cream
19c
'i|i'
--
NYSEPTOL
Mouth
Wash
and
a
revision
of
the
securities
act
and
proposed
stock
exchange
legislation.
|
Businessmen
gathered
at
the
twenty-second
annual
convention
listened
to
Strawn
after
hearing
Hugh
S.
Johnson
talk
on
criticism
|
anof
the
throwing
of
"pop
bottles
and
dead
cats"
at
last
night's
ses-
;
sion.
Shaped
By
Criticism.
j
The
NRA
Chief
said
his
organiza-
|
tion
had
been
shaped
in
part
by
I
criticism.
Asked
directly
if
the
prin-
]
ciples
embodied
in
the
recovery
act
j
were
to
he
permanent,
he
replied:
j
"If
there
has
been
any
good
demonstrated
by
the
recovery
act,
it
will
live
and
it
ought
to
live;
if
there
has
been
any
bad
it
will
die
and
it
ought
to
die."
While
not
so
outspoken,
other
speakers
who
followed
Strawn
today
also
found
room
for
criticism,
mostly
centering
around
the
securities
act.
voc
bottle
43Â°
Katharine
Hepburn
j
Leaves
Miami
for
i
New
York
by
Plane
MIAMI,
Fla..
May
3.
(vB--Travel-
ing
under
the
name
of
Mrs.
S.
Maple,
Katherine
Hepburn,
the
red-
haired
movie
actres,
left
here
today
by
Commercial
air
liner
for
New
York.
She
arrived
here
late
yesterday
from
Merida,
Yucatan,
where
she
instituted
divorce
proceedings
against
her
husband,
Ludlow
Ogden
Imith.
With
her
was
her
traveling
companion.
Laura
Harding,
who
registered
under
the
name
of
Miss
J.
Rogers.
The
actress
declined
to
make
any
comment
on
the
divorce
action
or
her
plans
for
the
immediate
future.
"The
Eyes
of
Texas."
long
sung
at
gatherings
of
Texans
from
coast
to
coast,
only
recently
was
designated
the
official
song
of
the
Uni-
I
vcrsity
of
Texas.
i
This
fine
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x
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ERE
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